Central Florida wide receiver Gabriel Davis celebrates his touchdown catch against SMU with tight end Jordan Akins (88) during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Mike Stone)

Central Florida wide receiver Marlon Williams (17) runs after making the catch as SMU defensive back Jordan Wyatt (15) defends during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Mike Stone)

SMU quarterback Ben Hicks (8) passes against Central Florida during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Mike Stone)

UCF quarterback McKenzie Milton (10) celebrates after scoring a touchdown against SMU during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, in Dallas, Texas. (AP Photo/Mike Stone)

Central Florida quarterback McKenzie Milton (10) drops back to pass as SMU linebacker Shaine Hailey (30) defends during the first half of an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Mike Stone)

But the Knights earned their usual result, leaving SMU with a 31-24 victory, remaining the only undefeated team in the Group of Five and on track for a major New Year's Day bowl game if they can win out.

"We found ourselves in a close game that we probably shouldn't have been in — and I love the way our team responded," UCF coach Scott Frost said. "When you have 600-plus yards on offense, you are supposed to have more points than that."

Milton threw a touchdown pass and ran for a score, but he also threw two interceptions, including one that was returned 36 yards for a touchdown by SMU's Jordan Wyatt. He had thrown just three picks all season.

The Knights (8-0, 5-0 AAC, No. 18 CFP) also fumbled inside the SMU 20 and saw their opening drive end deep in SMU territory when they turned the ball over on downs.

"We made it harder than it probably had to be," Frost said.

SMU's best opportunity at an upset fizzled with 5:10 remaining when wideout Trey Quinn dropped a pass on fourth-and-3 that would have given the Mustangs (6-3, 3-2) a first down deep in UCF territory.

The game wasn't quite the shootout that was expected. UCF entered the weekend averaging 51 points, the most in the nation. SMU was averaging 41.5 points.

Still, there were plenty of explosive plays throughout. Two of UCF's scoring drives lasted three plays or less but covered at least 75 yards.

"If you watch them on tape, their linebackers are always up around the box," Frost said. "It makes it harder to get easy yards and easier to manufacture some big plays."

That's exactly what the Knights did. Early in the second quarter, Milton found wide receiver Gabriel Davis down the right sideline for an 80-yard touchdown strike.

Adrian Killins Jr. scored on runs of 64 yards and 34 yards for UCF, splitting defenders and shedding would-be tacklers along the way. He rushed for 147 yards on 14 carries.

"Every time we needed something, Killins would just pop one," Frost said.

SMU scored on its first offensive play from scrimmage when Ben Hicks connected with James Proche for an 86-yard touchdown player. The sophomore receiver made five defenders miss on the catch-and-run, following a couple blockers down the sideline to the end zone. Proche finished with seven catches for 173 yards.

The Mustangs saw a 56-yard drive in the first half end a yard short when running back Ke'Mon Freeman fumbled into the end zone for a touchback.

Milton finished 23 for 40 for a career 412 yards, with a touchdown and the two picks. Hicks was 27 for 51 for 283 yards and a touchdown.

"There's a reason they're undefeated," SMU coach Chad Morris said. "But we're a program that's trending in the right direction. One game does not change the direction that we're heading."

POLL IMPLICATIONS

A week after feasting on overmatched Austin Peay, No. 15 UCF picked up a high-quality road win against an SMU team that was 5-0 at home. The Knights may slip ahead of No. 14 Iowa State and No. 13 Virginia Tech, both of whom lost Saturday.

THE TAKEAWAY

UCF: Despite some uncharacteristic interceptions from Milton, the Knights made enough big plays to stay undefeated and remain in line for a possible New Year's Day bowl bid.

SMU: Quinn, who entered the game leading the nation with 9.9 catches per game, didn't have a big night — and the Mustangs didn't find points as easy to come by. Quinn finished with 11 catches, but for just 47 yards — plus the costly drop late in the fourth quarter. Still, SMU is bowl eligible in Chad Morris' third season as coach.

UP NEXT

UCF: The Knights have UConn at home next week and then close out the regular season with a trip to Temple and home against South Florida.

SMU: The Mustangs travel to Navy and Memphis before closing at home against Tulane.